Hi Folks,
There was a neat item on "The World Tonight" tonight (Radio 4, Tue 31 May) regarding what looks like a very determined effort by Brazil to move to Open Source.
You can Listen Again in the usual way to the whole program if you want to, but to get just the OSS item feed the following to RealPlayer:
rtsp://rmv8.bbc.net.uk/radio4/worldtonight/ worldtonight_tue.ra?start="00:33:45.0"&end="00:39:15.0"
(this is all one line).
Best wishes to all, Ted.
-------------------------------------------------------------------- E-Mail: (Ted Harding) Ted.Harding@nessie.mcc.ac.uk Fax-to-email: +44 (0)870 094 0861 Date: 01-Jun-05 Time: 01:43:50 ------------------------------ XFMail ------------------------------
On Wednesday 01 June 2005 1:43 am, Ted Harding wrote:
There was a neat item on "The World Tonight" tonight (Radio 4, Tue 31 May) regarding what looks like a very determined effort by Brazil to move to Open Source.
Sounds interesting and I will tune in when I have a few moments and have a listen, but isn't it ironic that a programme about Open Source movements is published in one of the nastiest closed source formats of all time :-)
On 6/1/05, Wayne Stallwood ALUGlist@digimatic.plus.com wrote:
On Wednesday 01 June 2005 1:43 am, Ted Harding wrote:
There was a neat item on "The World Tonight" tonight (Radio 4, Tue 31 May) regarding what looks like a very determined effort by Brazil to move to Open Source.
Sounds interesting and I will tune in when I have a few moments and have a listen, but isn't it ironic that a programme about Open Source movements is published in one of the nastiest closed source formats of all time :-)
If it is only one of the nastiest, which would you consider to be the most nasty closed source audio format?
Tim.